Just a month after splitting from Italian model and actress Elisabette Canalis, 32, the former “ER” star, 50, has hooked up with 31-year-old actress and former professional wrestler Stacy Keibler.

Keibler also competed on season two of “Dancing With the Stars.”

Clooney split from Canalis last month after she repeatedly dropped hints in interviews that she wanted to marry and start a family.

After a four-year marriage ended, he has openly sworn off any plans to ever try again. Clooney was married to New York actress Talia Balsam between 1989 before divorcing in 1993.

Angelina Jolie is reportedly bored in London waiting for Brad Pitt, who’s putting in long days on the set of World War Z.

Jolie is so unhappy with Pitt’s endless days shooting in the U.K. that she’s seriously considering leaving the country until he finishes the film, a source told Us Weekly.

“She’s not pleased being at home while he’s on set,” the source says. “These are the longest hours he’s spent on a set in a while, so it’s just her and the kids with not much to do.”

Although the 36-year-old mother of six has been out and about with her brood, it remains to be seen whether she will stick it out in Britain, or head back to the states.

Amy Winehouse’s parents are planning to use their daughter’s $4 million North London house as the headquarters for a new Amy Winehouse Foundation, a charity expected to include “causes close to heart,” her father told the Sun.

Though he didn’t give specifics, speculation is that the 10-room mansion could be used for rehab projects.

“It could include help for children in trouble, kids suffering health problems, children’s hospices and more,” Mitch Winehouse told the British paper. “We want to make a positive difference.”

The 27-year-old singer, famous as much for her battles with drug and alcohol as her soulful voice and meteoric music career, was found dead in her apartment July 23.

Though toxicology report results are not expected for weeks, her family told the Sun last week that they believe she died of alcohol withdrawal.

Some of the funding for the Amy Winehouse Foundation, which will officially announce its mission statement on Sept. 14, on what would have been the “Rehab” singer’s 28th birthday, will come from her final song, “Body and Soul.” The duet with Tony Bennett was recorded in March for the 85-year-old legend’s upcoming album.

“All the royalties will go to the foundation that Amy’s father is starting to teach all the young children not to take drugs,” Bennett told The Sun.

The son of the late Farrah Fawcett and Ryan O’Neal pleaded not guilty last week to felony heroin possession and will remain jailed until a hearing later this month.

Redmond O’Neal’s attorney Richard Pintal said he hopes to reach a deal with prosecutors that includes additional treatment for his client, who had a string of drug arrests in recent years.

O’Neal also pleaded not guilty to a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Police uncovered a 9mm handgun in a search of his apartment after his arrest Tuesday.

O’Neal’s father and his half-sister, the actress Tatum O’Neal, also attended the hearing.

The 26-year-old was on probation for an incident in which he brought drugs to a detention facility north of Los Angeles. In that case, he was arrested in the parking lot of the facility while still under supervision for a previous drug arrest and an incident in which he and his father were arrested at the actor’s Malibu home.

He was in jail in June 2009 when his mother died after a battle with cancer and was briefly released to attend her funeral.

Until his arrest by Santa Monica police on Tuesday, the younger O’Neal had stayed out of trouble for months. He was stopped after officers say they saw him run a red light, and a search of his car found the drugs, authorities have said.

He returns to court on Aug. 24 for a probation violation hearing and to try to resolve the current case, Pintal said.

O’Neal faces nearly four years in prison if convicted, but Pintal said he is hopeful a judge will order him to receive additional treatment.

“We remain cautiously optimistic and hopeful that there remains a possibility that a resolution can be structured that allows Mr. O’Neal to receive treatment rather than custody,” Pintal said.

The long-awaited exhibition will feature artifacts, stories and perspective on the historical role of brewing in Colorado's fortunes, from Adolph Coors' first experiments to (relative) upstarts and current titans such as New Belgium Brewing.